English Dub Review: Kakuriyo -Bed & Breakfast for Spirits “Tiramisu of Memories.”



Overview

Aoi gets some surprise new helpers, Ginji ponders his feelings, and Kasuga and Kiyo try to please each other.


Our Take

Picking up from the previous episode, this chapter leans heavily into atmosphere and relationships, centering on Aoi’s growing role as both a cook and quiet mediator in the Northern Lands. Her task of creating a new specialty dish highlights how much trust she’s earned, while the focus on local ingredients reinforces the arc’s slower, worldbuilding-driven tone. 

Much of the episode’s weight comes from interpersonal dynamics rather than plot movement, particularly through Ginji’s internal conflict and Aoi’s interactions with those struggling around her. The story explores themes of loyalty, unrequited feelings, and fractured trust, using food as a bridge between memories and present wounds. While the pacing may feel uneven, lingering longer on reflection than some might expect, it reinforces the series’ strength in blending romance, folklore, and everyday kindness rather than dramatic escalation.

Overall, this episode leans into a calm, introspective rhythm that favors emotional texture over plot momentum, using cooking and quiet conversations to deepen relationships and unspoken tensions. While the pacing may feel slow and many threads remain unresolved, it succeeds as a warm, character-driven chapter that allows feelings, flavors, and fragile connections to quietly simmer, giving the episode weight without forcing immediate payoff.